In trading nothing works 100%. There are so many variables so that no single factor, e.g. an indicator, or technique, e.g., TA will make one a profitable trader.
Let’s say you have a strong edge on TA that works 80% of the time, which is a very high probability. If you don’t control your position size/risk well during the other 20%, you will lose back all the previous winnings. In addition, the market changes every day/week/month/year so your edge will change for better or worse as well. Everything in trading is a moving target and that makes trading so hard and fascinating at the same time.
That’s why becoming a consistent profitable trader is so difficult, not that we don’t have winning trades. Many traders have a 50%+ win rate but are still net losers.
Therefore, the answer to OP’s question is all TA courses are both good (work sometimes) and bad (don’t work sometimes). With that said it definitely helps to learn TA nonetheless.
Let’s say you have a strong edge on TA that works 80% of the time, which is a very high probability. If you don’t control your position size/risk well during the other 20%, you will lose back all the previous winnings. In addition, the market changes every day/week/month/year so your edge will change for better or worse as well. Everything in trading is a moving target and that makes trading so hard and fascinating at the same time.
That’s why becoming a consistent profitable trader is so difficult, not that we don’t have winning trades. Many traders have a 50%+ win rate but are still net losers.
Therefore, the answer to OP’s question is all TA courses are both good (work sometimes) and bad (don’t work sometimes). With that said it definitely helps to learn TA nonetheless.
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LOL